Ise of The Ation Tate State, Nation, and Nation-State: Sovereignty Based in Law
Ise of The Ation Tate State, Nation, and Nation-State: Sovereignty Based in Law
Ise of The Ation Tate State, Nation, and Nation-State: Sovereignty Based in Law
The Early Modern Times lasted from the Middle Ages The great undertaking of Philip’s life was to defend the
toward the end of the 1400s to the beginnings of the Catholic Church. A general uprising broke out in the
Industrial Revolution at the end of the 1700s. It is 1560s when Protestants in the Netherlands had enough of
characterized by the rise of the importance of science, the King Philip’s policies – high taxes, autocratic rule, and the
rise of nation-states, and the dominance of the economic Inquisition. This uprising led to the Eighty Years’ War,
theory of mercantilism. The Modern Times began toward and would cost the Spanish Empire dearly in terms of
the end of the 1700s continuing to present day. gold, silver, and manpower.
By the 1580s, Philip saw England’s Queen Elizabeth I as
his chief Protestant rival. Elizabeth encouraged Sea Dogs
Rise and Fall of the Spanish Nation-State
(English captains) to plunder Spanish galleons of their
Under Queen Isabella and King Ferdinand, Spain had treasure. Francis Drake, perhaps the most notable English
expelled the last Muslim rulers through the Reconquista Sea Dog, explorer, and looter of Spanish cities in the
in 1492 and began to enforce religious unity in Americas, was knighted by Elizabeth – much to the
Catholicism. In that same year, Isabella financed dismay of Philip.
Columbus’s voyage across the Atlantic, leading to Spanish
conquest of the Americas.
In 1519, Charles V, grandson of Ferdinand and Isabella,
inherited an enormous empire. He not only inherited the
crown of Spain but was also the heir of the Austrian
Hapsburgs, which included the Holy Roman Empire and
the Netherlands. As a devout Catholic, he fought to
suppress the Protestant movement in the German states.
His greatest foe was the Ottoman Empire, ruled by
Muslim Turks who occupied much of Hungary and
challenged Spain for naval supremacy in the
Mediterranean. In 1555, after years of brutal fighting,
Charles V signed the Peace of Augsburg, which ended the
fighting between the Catholics and Protestants in the Holy
Roman Empire.
In 1556, exhausted and
disillusioned, Charles V gave up his
The Spanish Armada vs. the English Royal Navy
titles, divided his empire, and
entered a monastery. The Spanish To subdue the English and the Dutch, Philip prepared
successor, King Philip II, ruled for the “Invincible Armada”, to carry a Spanish invasion
42 years. He reigned as an absolute force to England. In 1588, the Armada sailed with more
monarch, a ruler with complete than 130 ships and 20,000 men. The larger, slower Spanish
authority over the government and ships took losses from the smaller, faster English ships,
the lives of the people. He also which also had greater range with their artillery. The fleet
Philip II of Spain asserted that he ruled by divine was scattered and attempted to sail around the Northern
part of the British Isle, however, they encountered the system of checks and balances, there was no parliament to
“Protestant Wind”, a massive storm that wreaked havoc check the Louis’ power.
on the Spanish Armada. Fewer than half of the fleet
France’s government followed mercantilist policies to
limped home in defeat. Although this debacle ended
bolster the economy. To protect French manufacturers,
Philip’s ambitions of English conquest, it did not
high tariffs were placed on goods (so the population
immediately weaken Spain’s empire.
would buy more domestic products). Overseas colonies
Nonetheless, by the mid 1600s, Spain’s supremacy had were also expanded, such as New France in North
ended. Costly wars drained wealth out of Spain almost as America. Although France became the wealthiest state in
fast as it came in. Then, too, treasure from the Americas Europe, no amount of money could keep up with Louis’
led Spain to neglect farming, industry, and commerce. court or his many wars.
American gold and silver led to soaring inflation, with
prices rising much higher in Spain than anywhere else in
Europe. Also, the expulsion of Muslims, and later the
Jews, deprived the economy of many skilled artisans and
merchants. By the late 1600s, France had replaced Spain as
the most powerful European nation.
The French Nation-State under Louis XIV
From the 1560s to the 1590s, religious wars between
Huguenots (French Protestants) and the Catholic majority
tore France apart. In 1589, a Huguenot prince inherited the
throne as Henry IV. Shrewdly, he converted to
Catholicism, but protected the Protestants through the
Edict of Nantes in 1598. This decree granted Huguenots
religious toleration and allowed them to fortify their
towns and cities.
After Henry IV was killed The Construction of Versailles
by a fanatic monk in 1610,
In the countryside outside of Paris, Louis XIV
his son inherited the throne
transformed a royal hunting lodge into the immense
as Louis XIII. The man who
palace of Versailles (ver sī). Its halls and salons displayed
possessed most of the
the greatest paintings and statues, and glittering
power, however, was
chandeliers and mirrors. An extensive garden of flowers,
Cardinal Richelieu.
trees, and fountains surrounded the palace in precise
Seeking to consolidate royal
geometric patterns. As both the king’s home and seat of
power, he weakened the
government, it housed more than 10,000 people, from
two groups who did not
servants to nobles and officials. Louis XIV followed a
easily bow to authority –
precise and elaborate schedule ritualistically followed day
the Huguenots and the
after day.
nobles. Richelieu destroyed
their fortified walls and Read “A Day With the Sun King” for a better view
Cardinal Richelieu castles, outlawed their of how regimented he made his daily routine
armies, yet still allowed the
Rituals such as levee, or rising,
Huguenots to practice their religion.
served a serious purpose.
Louis XIV inherited the throne in 1643 at the age of five, French nobles were
but he didn’t inherit full ruling powers until years later. descendants of feudal lords
When he was still young an uprising – called the Fronde – who held great power and
began. Nobles, merchants, peasants, and the urban poor vast claims to land. Louis
rebelled – each for their own reasons. At one point the turned these men into
rioters forced Louis XIV and his family from the palace. courtiers angling for privileges
and titles rather than warriors
Like his great-grandfather, Philip II of Spain, Louis XIV
battling for power. Louis was also
firmly believed in the divine right. Louis took the sun as
a patron of the arts and sponsored musicians, painters,
the symbol of his absolute power. Just as the sun stands at
architects, and artists of all types. But it was Louis’
the center of the solar system, so the “Sun King” stands at
obsession for power and prestige that would lead to
the center of the state. He was often quoted in saying,
disastrous times for France in the long run.
“L’etat c’est moi” – “I am the state.” Unlike the English
The Wars of Louis XIV would prove to be of little gain, Murder and torture were followed by disease. The war
and great cost. At first, the French army was virtually led to severe depopulation throughout Europe. Some
unstoppable. However, led by the Dutch or the English, estimate that as many as one third of the people in the
European powers allied together to maintain a balance of German states may have died as a result of the war.
power in the region, preventing any one state from
Rise of the Modern State
dominating Europe. Many of Louis’ later wars drained
the French economy. Much of the royal silverware was
melted down to help pay for these expensive endeavors.
In 1685, Louis revoked the Edict of Nantes, resulting in
the migration of more than 100,000 out of France. The
persecution of the Huguenots was perhaps the Sun King’s
most costly blunder. The Huguenots had been among the
most hard-working and prosperous of Louis’s subjects.
Their loss was thus a serious blow to the French economy,
just as the expulsion of Muslims and Jews had hurt Spain.
At the time of Louis’s death in 1715, France was the
strongest power in Europe, but with virtually no money in
its treasury.
The Thirty Years’ War and Its Impact
on the Nation-State The ratification of one of the treaties at the Peace of Westphalia
Combatants During the Thirty Years’ War Finally, in 1648, the exhausted combatants accepted a
series of treaties known as the Peace of Westphalia. He
Imperialists (Catholics) Anti-Imperialists (Protestants)
French emerged as the clear winner, gaining territory on
Holy Roman Empire Bohemia, Sweden, Denmark, both Spanish and German frontiers. The Netherlands and
(Catholic League, Scotland, France (Catholic, the Swiss Federation became independent states. The
Bavaria,…), Spain, but joined for its own Hapsburgs were the big losers; having to accept the almost
Austria (Hapsburgs) interests) total independence of all princes from the Holy Roman
Empire. Germany was divided into more than 360 states,
“one for every day of the year.” Each state acknowledged
The French philosopher Voltaire noted that, by early the Holy Roman emperor, but each state also had its own
modern times, the Holy Roman Empire was neither holy, government, coinage, state church, armed forces, and
nor Roman, nor an empire. Instead, it was a patchwork of foreign policy (quite the opposite of a nation-state).
several hundred small, separate states. The Thirty Years’
From a political-geographic perspective, the Peace of
War began in Bohemia, the present-day Czech Republic.
Westphalia can be seen as the first modern step toward the
The Bohemian king sought to suppress Protestants and
emergence of the European state. The treaties signed at the
assert his power over the local nobles. In 1618, a few
rebellious noblemen tossed two royal officials out
of a castle window in Prague – some fifty feet
above the ground. This act started a local revolt,
which widened into a massive European war.
The war took a terrible toll. Roving armies of
mercenaries burned villages, destroyed crops, and
killed without mercy. A novel of the time
describes the plundering of a village by
marauding soldiers:
“For one of [the peasants] they had taken they
thrust into the baking oven and there lit a fire
under him, … as for another, they put a cord
around his head and twisted it so tight with a
piece of wood that the blood gushed from his
mouth and nose and ears. In a word each had
his own device to torture the peasants.”
- Jacob von Grimmelshausen, Simplicissimus
end of the Thirty Years War (1648) contained language Defining the Modern Times
that recognized statehood and nation-hood, clearly Far from creating peace, the transition from feudal to
defined boundaries, and guarantees of security. The Prince modern institutions was marked by a series of Revolutions
of any realm could determine the religion of that realm, as and military conflicts, beginning with the Eighty Years’
part of an arrangement that governed how territorial units War, which resulted in Dutch independence. The Peace of
in the Holy Roman Empire would relate to one another. Westphalia (1648) established the modern international
This furthered the notion of sovereignty based in law. system of independent nation-states (e.g., Netherlands),
ending the feudal system. The English “Glorious“
Revolution (1688) marked the ending of feudalism in Great
Contemporary woodcut Britain, creating a modern constitutional monarchy. The
depicting two Catholic American Revolution (starting in 1776) marked the end of
emissaries being thrown British control in the New World. It was also around this
from a castle window. time that the Early Modern Times concluded.
This event led to the
Bohemian Revolt in 1618, The French Revolution (starting in 1789) overthrew the
and ultimately the Thirty “Ancien Régime” in France, and as a result of the
Years’ War. The Napoleonic Wars, served to introduce political modernity
Catholics said that angels in much of Western Europe. This event, along with the
carried them to safety, onset of the Industrial Revolution, often marks the
whereas the Protestant beginnings of the Modern Times.
version said they landed
in a pile of horse manure
which spared their lives.
The English, American, and French Revolutions limited the
powers of monarchs. Democracy, Liberty, Equality, and
The second major event that led to the modern era was Fraternity (brotherhood) became the new standards of
the French Revolution that spread the ideas of the rights government and society. Social values such as salvation and
honor became overshadowed by aims toward wealth,
of nations. The doctrine of nationalism, however, existed
property, and individual rights.
earlier and encouraged monarchies like Spain to create
cohesive states (e.g. kicking out the Moors through the Men such as Napoleon introduced new codes of law in
Reconquista). Europe based on merit and achievement, rather than a class
system rooted in Feudalism. The modern political system of
Europe’s politico-geographical evolution was to have Liberalism (derived from the word “Liberty”) empowered the
enormous significance, because the European state model members of the middle and lower classes to act – sometimes
was exported through migration and colonialism, which violently. The power of elected bodies (democracy)
rose from an instable core region (e.g. due to European supplanted traditional rule by royal decree (absolutism). A
competition, wars, and the philosophy of mercantilism) as new attachment to one’s nation, culture, language, and
countries sought out colonies to support the mother religion produced powerful forces of Nationalism. This in
country. turn ultimately contributed to new ideologies in the 20th
century such as Fascism, Socialism, and Communism.
European colonialism diffused the ideas of the Modern Times to a global scale